• Coin Show Displays (various): Numerous tokens and medals from several private collections.

Other design submissions and awards:

• Six designs in a national open design competition for the US Mint’s 1993 WWII commemorative coins.

• Apollo Astronaut designs for the new small-size “golden” dollar coin. The designs were featured on the front page of Coin World on two separate occasions (March 30, 1998 and April 13, 1998 issues).

• Presentation at the Dollar Coin Advisory Committee meeting in Philadelphia in 1999. The purpose of the meeting was to decide what woman to portray on the new small-size “golden” dollar. The proposal for Bessie Coleman was tied for second place in the committee’s voting behind Sacagawea.

• Unsolicited works accepted into the limited invitational design competition for the Sacagawea dollar (one of only two unsolicited submissions that were actually accepted).

• Flying Eagle design which was one of seven official US Mint finalists for the Sacagawea dollar reverse.

• Six designs for the Capitol Visitor’s Center commemorative coins in the US Mint’s limited invitational design competition.

• Invited by the US Mint to submit designs for all five of the 2001 state quarters. The New York and Rhode Island designs won the competition, and they were used on the actual coins.

• The Rhode Island state quarter design was named the best “trade” (circulating) coin in the world by an international panel of judges for World Coin News’ 2001 COTY (Coin of the Year) awards. This was the first state quarter to receive such an award.

• Winner of the design contest sponsored by the state of Maine, which attracted about 200 entries. The US Mint’s final Maine quarter design was based upon this concept.

• One of 13 finalists in the Wisconsin state quarter design contest, out of 5700 entrants.

• One of 10 finalists in the Florida state quarter design contest, out of 5000 submissions.

• One of 20 finalists in the California state quarter design contest, out of 8000 submissions.

• A design honoring the 10th Mountain Division was submitted to Colorado and was the basis for one of the five finalists for the state quarter.